John Balaban (serial killer)
John Balaban | |
---|---|
Born | Ioan Balaban 1924 |
Died | 26 August 1953 Adelaide Gaol, Australia | (aged 28–29)
Cause of death | Execution by hanging |
Other names | "The Romanian Maniac" |
Criminal status | Executed |
Conviction(s) | Murder |
Criminal penalty | Death |
Details | |
Victims | 5+ |
Span of crimes | 1948–1953 |
Country | France, Australia |
State(s) | Île-de-France, South Australia |
Date apprehended | 4 May 1953 |
Ioan "John" Balaban (1924 – 26 August 1953), also known as The Romanian Maniac,[citation needed] was a Romanian serial killer who murdered at least five people in France and Australia, including his wife, her mother and her son. He was subsequently executed for his crimes.
Biography[]
Balaban was born in Romania in 1924. A loner who fell into raging fits when rejected, Balaban decided to leave his home country and travel to France, arriving there as a 17-year-old in October 1941. In February 1948, the 24-year-old Balaban murdered Hungarian woman Rewa Kvas in Paris. He then moved to Australia on 11 July 1951, working in several jobs before becoming an industrial chemist.
In September 1952, he married a 30-year-old woman named Thelma Joyce Cadd in Adelaide, who lived with her 6-year-old son Phillip and her 66-year-old mother Susan Ackland at a place called the "Sunshine Café". The family lived in a small flat above the café.
Murder of Zora Kusic[]
On 5 December 1952, 29-year-old Yugoslav migrant Zora Kusic was murdered at her shack in North Parade, Torrensville, with her mutilated body being found by a resident of a nearby boarding house. Kusic's head was nearly severed; a pocket knife was found in a bloodstained dish of water near the bed. Police believed that she had met her murderer at a hotel or wine bar before taking him to her hut, and so, they investigated every hotel in Torrensville. Both the South Australian and immigrant community, appalled by the severity of the crime, provided every little bit of evidence they had in order to solve it. A taxi driver said that he had driven the woman and a man resembling Balaban on that very night, and so, Balaban was arrested and questioned for five hours. During questioning he lied to authorities about his whereabouts on that night[1] and was later released due to lack of evidence.[2]
Triple murder[]
After the events of the trial, Balaban returned to his family in February 1953. The domestic situation did not improve for him and he became unhappy with his marriage. On Saturday, 11 April 1953, Balaban left the flat to go drinking. While out, he became very drunk and attacked several people with an iron bar, including one lady at a public toilet block and several people, resulting in the hospitalisation of a person due to head injuries.
Following the violent drinking spree, Balaban returned home and grabbed a claw hammer. He first turned towards his wife Thelma, who was sleeping in the flat's main bedroom and killed her. Then, he moved onto the smaller bedroom, where Phillip and Ackland were, brutally attacking and critically injuring them as well. Finally, Balaban attacked 24-year-old Verna Manie, a waitress who lived in a sleep-out at the balcony, but the woman tried to fight back, breaking the room's lamps and smearing the walls with blood in the process. In an attempt to save her life, Manie threw herself off the first story window, landing on the pavement and falling unconscious. Frightened by the sudden screaming, neighbors quickly called the police, who promptly arrived and saw Manie lying on the pavement.[2] They arrested Balaban, and sent him to the prison. Phillip and Ackland were transported to the hospital before succumbing to their injuries.
Trial, sentence and death[]
On 5 May, Balaban was charged with the death of his wife and re-charged with Kusic's murder.[3] In an unwritten statement, he confessed fully to the crimes and, claiming that his family "deserved to die" because his wife had "acted like a prostitute, and [he] was very much against them".[1] Aside from that, he also admitted to strangling Kusic in Torrensville because she was a prostitute, along with strangling Kwas in Paris before migrating to Australia. The court quickly sentenced him to death for Kusic's murder, a decision which he unsuccessfully tried to appeal on the grounds of insanity before the Full Court of Australia.
He was eventually hanged at the Adelaide Gaol on 26 August 1953, with only a few guards present when he was executed.
See also[]
References[]
- ^ Jump up to: a b "Murder Confession Alleged". The Barrier Miner. LXVI (17445). Broken Hill, New South Wales. 4 May 1953. p. 1. Retrieved 25 November 2019 – via National Library of Australia.
- ^ Jump up to: a b "Man On Murder Count: Two women killed in cafe attack". The Courier-Mail (5107). Brisbane, Queensland. 13 April 1953. p. 1. Retrieved 25 November 2019 – via National Library of Australia.
- ^ "Balaban Remanded on Murder Charges". The Advertiser. 95 (29503). Adelaide, South Australia. 5 May 1953. p. 1. Retrieved 26 November 2019 – via National Library of Australia.
Bibliography[]
- Kidd, Paul B. (2000). Australia's Serial Killers. Sydney: Macmillan Publishers. ISBN 978-1-74261-144-0.
External links[]
- "John Balaban". True Crime Library.
- 1924 births
- 1953 deaths
- Male serial killers
- Romanian serial killers
- Australian serial killers
- Executed serial killers
- Familicides
- Romanian people executed abroad
- Murderers of children
- Crimes against sex workers
- Romanian criminals
- People convicted of murder by South Australia
- People executed by South Australia
- 20th-century executions by Australia
- People executed by Australia by hanging
- Romanian emigrants to France
- Romanian emigrants to Australia
- Murder in South Australia
- Murder in France
- 1948 murders in Europe
- 1952 murders in Oceania
- 1953 murders in Oceania
- 1950s murders in Australia